The Null Device

Posts matching tags 'art deco'

2005/9/23

Melbourne's Astor Theatre, the splendid, anachronistically grand art deco cinema in St. Kilda, is being sold. The Astor is famous for its decor, 70mm projector and combination of recent films, vintage classics and arthouse/cult movies, and its calendars are a fixture on the toilet doors of inner Melbourne. The owner hopes that the new owner will keep him on as a consultant to run it; though it may well go the way of the Valhalla in Westgarth, a former cult/arthouse cinema which now runs populist schmaltz like disnannies and romcoms, or else be turned into boutique lifestyle apartments or a designer shopping complex. If so, it will be a great loss for Melbourne.

A gallery in London is staging an exhibition of Italian late-futurist "aeropainting", vaguely Art Deco-ish paintings of bombers on missions and such from Mussolini's Italy. The Ettorick Collection are downplaying the fascist subtext of the images, though that hasn't gotten past the appalled Guardian columnist, who also suggests that the Berlusconi government's backing of such an exhibition may be part of an attempt to rehabilitate Mussolini, and/or a fascist streak in the right-wing Italian government.

Tato painted this piece of fascist crap in 1937. Does the date ring a bell? It was on April 26 1937 that the Condor Legion of the German Luftwaffe, in support of General Franco's war against the Spanish Republic, bombed the Basque capital Guernica, on a market day, killing 1,654 people out of a population of 7,000. Pablo Picasso began Guernica after he read about this new chapter in the story of human cruelty. It seems plausible that Tato's painting Aerial Mission refers to the same events. For more than half a century Picasso's Guernica has preserved the memory of a town torn to pieces by aerial bombing. Now, at last, Futurist Skies gives us the other point of view: that of the murderer in the cockpit.

Futurist Skies is not a joke. It is not a parody but an example of the moronic complacency of the art world. And it really does have the support of the Italian state. Silvio Berlusconi's government has meanly and destructively starved museums of cash. But the director of the Estorick Collection warmly thanks the Italian foreign ministry for its "commitment" and "support" for this exhibition of meretricious art from the golden age of Il Duce. At least it's good to know where the Berlusconi government's cultural priorities lie. Claiming "aeropainting" as a major 20th-century art amounts to rehabilitating fascist kitsch.

Why is flying inherently fascist? Because it exploits man's drive to
put himself *above* the masses, as if the masses were some sort of disease
that needs to be expurged from the soul. Flight becomes partly a search for
clarity [of the sort that fascist movements purport to offer], partly a quest
to raise the spectre of patriarchic hegemony to new, unfounded heights.
Here there are many parallels to Hitler. Everything in Hitler's speeches
built on the idea of "purity", "room for living", etc. So it is no doubt
that some parallels may rise to the surface, once that surface is scratched.

A lot of Melbourne's Art Deco buildings
are in danger of demolition,
not being considered old enough to be worthy of protection: (The Age)

What the buildings have in common, however, is their place in the new
conservation battleground, according to the president of the Society Art Deco,
Robin Grow. Many people recognise the value of Victorian and Edwardian
buildings, he says, but anything built after the First World War has not
seemed quite old enough to be worth saving.

Houses in the style were built in "desirable" suburbs and the people likely
to buy them have the financial resources to demolish and rebuild. Many simply
don't like, or appreciate, old.

Unlike Victorian and Federation buildings, there is as yet not much business
in producing the hardware of the Moderne period. "I was quite surprised at
what we could not find - even down to furnishings. There's a lot of Art Deco
couches and yet trying to find Art Deco upholstery fabrics ... it's just no
show. Yet there was some beautiful stuff produced in that era and it was
only 50 years ago."

One year ago:

2019/5/18

In other news, today was the Australian federal election, and another Labor landslide that dissolved into thin air upon contact with reality, with a terminally unpopular conservative government romping home to a resounding victory. You can

Two years ago:

2018/5/26

Yesterday, the Republic of Ireland held a referendum on repealing its near-total ban on abortion. The referendum had been many years in planning: other similar referenda had failed in the past, and most infamously, one in

Five years ago:

2015/5/24

The other big news this weekend, of course, Ireland voting in favour of legalising same-sex marriage . The margin (62%) was decisive enough, even without taking into account the fact that only one of Ireland's 43